Skyrmion size in skyrmion crystals

Abstract

A magnetic skyrmion is a topological object that can exist as a solitary embedded in the vast ferromagnetic phase, or coexists with a group of its "siblings" in various stripy phases as well as skyrmion crystals (SkXs). Isolated skyrmions and skyrmions in an SkX are circular while a skyrmion in other phases is a stripe of various forms. Unexpectedly, the sizes of the three different types of skyrmions depend on material parameters differently. For chiral magnetic films with exchange stiffness constant A, the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) strength D, and perpendicular magnetic anisotropy K, π2D2/(16AK)=1 separates isolated skyrmions from condensed skyrmion states. In contrast to isolated skyrmions whose size increases with D/K and is insensitive to 1 and stripe skyrmions whose width increases with A/D and is insensitive to 1, the size of skyrmions in SkXs is inversely proportional to the square root of skyrmion number density and decreases with A/D. This finding has important implications in our search for stable smaller skyrmions at the room temperature in applications.

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